Lake Placid Olympic Ski Jumping Complex

The Lake Placid Olympic Ski Jumping Complex, also known as the MacKenzie Intervale Ski Jumping Complex, consists of HS100- and HS128-meter ski jump towers built for the 1980 Olympic Games in Lake Placid, New York, United States. Modernized and lengthened in 2021, they are the only jumps in North America homologated for winter and summer jumping competitions. The complex is operated by the Olympic Regional Development Authority.

Lake Placid Olympic Ski Jumping Complex
MacKenzie Intervale
LocationLake Placid, New York,  United States
OperatorOlympic Regional Development Authority
Opened21 February 1921 (Large)
December 1978 (Normal)
Renovated2021
Expanded1923, 1932, 1950, 1965,
1977, 1980, 1983, 1994,
2011, 2021
Size
K–point90 metres (300 ft)
115 metres (377 ft)
Hill size100 metres (330 ft)
128 metres (420 ft)
Hill record136 metres (446 ft)
Ryōyū Kobayashi
(11 February 2023)
Top events
Olympics1932, 1980
World Championships1950

The 128-meter jump features an Observation deck which offers views of nearby John Brown's Farm and the surrounding High Peaks of the Adirondacks. Training and competition for Nordic ski jumping takes place year round thanks to a plastic mat out-run on the 90m jump. The Freestyle Aerial Training Center is located to the right of the base of the jump towers. Aerialists can train in the summer months by jumping into a 750,000 gallon pool.

In 2018, funding was approved to upgrade the tracks with cooling to ensure winter operation. Also, the smaller hills will be upgraded to current FIS standards with a safer spread of heights for jumpers to progress. This is in tandem with a number of major games being hosted by Lake Placid over the next few years.

On 11 February 2023, the complex hosted the first World Cup Men's super team (pairs) event in history.

Hill parameters

  • Construction point: 115 m
  • Hill size (HS): 128 m
  • Official hill record: 136.0 metres (446.2 ft) – Ryōyū Kobayashi (11 February 2023)
  • Inrun length: 98.07 m
  • Inrun angle: 35.1°
  • Take-off length: 6.89 m
  • Take-off angle: 11°
  • Take-off height: 3.08 m
  • Landing angle: 34.1°
  • Average speed: 93.1 km/h
  • Homologation source:

History

The Lake Placid Club built the first ski jump on this site in 1920, using the hillside itself as the jump surface. The jump was referred to as the Intervales 35-meter jump. On 21 February 1921, the first competition was held at this site, drawing 3,000 spectators. The record jump for the day was 124 feet, set by Antony Maurer. In 1923, the jump was enlarged to fifty meters, and in 1927, a new steel tower was built, raising the jump to 60 meters. In 1928, the tower was raised to 75 meters; this was the tower used for the 1932 Winter Olympic Games. In 1977, the old tower was demolished to make way for new 70 and 90-meter jumps, used for the 1980 Winter Olympic Games. In 1994, the landing hills were re-graded to bring the jumps into compliance with current rules, and increasing their height to 90 and 120 meters. In 2019, a pulse gondola was installed to replace an aging double chair which served the ski jumps. In 2021, both jumps received upgrades that enabled year-round training and increased reliability, in addition to a new base lodge.

The towers were built using a jacking system that lifted and poured concrete into the forms continuously, night and day, for 15 days for the larger jump, and 9 days for the smaller one.[citation needed]

The present record jumps stand at 105 meters for the 90-meter jump, set by Henry Loher, of Lake Placid, and 136.0 meters for the 120-meter jump, set by Ryōyū Kobayashi of Japan.

Ski jumping events

Winter Olympic Games

The complex was a venue in the 1932 Winter Olympics and 1980 Winter Olympics.

Year Date Hill Winner Second place Third place Ref
↓ Men's Individual ↓
1932 12 February   K60 Birger Ruud Hans Beck Kåre Walberg
1980 17 February   K86 Toni Innauer Hirokazu Yagi
Manfred Deckert
23 February   K114 Jouko Törmänen Hubert Neuper Jari Puikkonen

FIS Nordic World Championships

Year Date Hill Winner Second place Third place Ref
↓ Men's Individual ↓
1950 5 February   K61 Hans Bjørnstad Thure Lindgren Arnfinn Bergmann

FIS World Cup

Season Date Hill Winner Second place Third place Ref
↓ Men's Individual ↓
1982/83 15 January   K114 Matti Nykänen Armin Kogler Jeff Hastings
16 January   K114 Matti Nykänen Armin Kogler Steinar Bråten
1983/84 17 December   K86 Primož Ulaga Matti Nykänen Horst Bulau
Jeff Hastings
18 December   K114 Jeff Hastings Primož Ulaga Jiří Parma
1984/85 15 December   K114 Andreas Felder Jiří Parma Ernst Vettori
16 December   K86 Andreas Felder Jari Puikkonen Per Bergerud
1985/86 14 December   K114 Vegard Opaas Primož Ulaga Pavel Ploc
15 December   K86 Franz Neuländtner Ernst Vettori Steve Collins
1986/87 13 December   K114 Vegard Opaas Ernst Vettori Primož Ulaga
14 December   K86 Ernst Vettori Primož Ulaga Vegard Opaas
1987/88 12 December   K114 Pavel Ploc Dieter Thoma Andreas Bauer
13 December   K86 Pavel Ploc Jiří Parma Vegard Opaas
1988/89 10 December   K114 Jan Boklöv Ernst Vettori Pekka Suorsa
11 December   K86 Vegard Opaas Ernst Vettori Thomas Klauser
1989/90 9 December   K114 Ernst Vettori Matti Nykänen Jan Boklöv
10 December   K86 Ari-Pekka Nikkola Ernst Vettori Andreas Felder
1990/91 1 December   K86 Andreas Felder Ari-Pekka Nikkola Anssi Nieminen
2 December   K114 André Kiesewetter Stephan Zünd Ernst Vettori
2022/23 11 February   HS128 Andreas Wellinger Ryōyū Kobayashi Daniel Tschofenig
12 February   HS128 Halvor Egner Granerud Andreas Wellinger Stefan Kraft
2023/24 10 February   HS128 Lovro Kos Ryōyū Kobayashi Marius Lindvik
11 February   HS128 Stefan Kraft Lovro Kos
Philipp Raimund
2024/25 8 February   HS128 Johann André Forfang Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig
9 February   HS128 Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Anže Lanišek
↓ Women's Individual ↓
2024/25 7 February   HS128 Nika Prevc Eirin Maria Kvandal Alexandria Loutitt
8 February   HS128 Nika Prevc Agnes Reisch Selina Freitag
↓ Men's Super team ↓
2022/23 11 February   HS128  Poland
Dawid Kubacki
Piotr Żyła
 Austria
Daniel Tschofenig
Stefan Kraft
 Japan
Ryoyu Kobayashi
Naoki Nakamura
2023/24 10 February   HS128  Austria
Michael Hayböck
Stefan Kraft
 Germany
Philipp Raimund
Andreas Wellinger
 Norway
Johann André Forfang
Marius Lindvik
↓ Mixed team ↓
2024/25 8 February   HS128  Germany
1. Agnes Reisch
2. Philipp Raimund
3. Selina Freitag
4. Andreas Wellinger
 Norway
1. Thea Minyan Bjørseth
2. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal
3. Eirin Maria Kvandal
4. Johann André Forfang
 Austria
1. Lisa Eder
2. Jan Hörl
3. J. Seifriedsberger
4. Daniel Tschofenig

FIS Junior Nordic World Championships

Season Date Hill Winner Second place Third place Ref
↓ Men's Individual ↓
1986 16 February   K114 Virginio Lunardi Christian Rimmel Clas Brede Bråthen
↓ Men's team ↓
1986 13 February   HS128  West Germany
Dieter Thoma
Christian Rimmel
Robert Leonhardt
Friedrich Braun
 Italy
Virginio Lunardi
Carlo Pinzani
Paolo Rigoni
 Soviet Union
Juri Durinov
Michail Esin
Sergej Badenko
Evgeny Vashurin

FISU Winter World University Games

Year Date Hill Winner Second place Third place Ref
↓ Men's Individual ↓
1972 5 March   K70 Hideki Nakano Gariy Napalkov Yuriy Kalinin
2023 16 January   HS100 Danil Vassilyev Maximilian Lienher Timon-Pascal Kahofer
↓ Women's Individual ↓
2023 16 January   HS100 Nicole Konderla Machiko Kubota Kinga Rajda
↓ Mixed team ↓
2023 18 January   HS100  Poland I
Nicole Konderla
Adam Niżnik
 Japan
Machiko Kubota
Ryusei Ikeda
 Poland II
Kinga Rajda
Szymon Jojko
↓ Men's team ↓
2023 20 January   HS100  Austria
Timon-Pascal Kahofer
Maximilian Lienher
 Kazakhstan
Sergey Tkachenko
Danil Vassilyev
 Japan
Sakutaro Kobayashi
Ryusei Ikeda
↓ Women's team ↓
2023 20 January   HS100  Poland I
Kinga Rajda
Nicole Konderla
 Poland II
Paulina Cieślar
Anna Twardosz
 Japan
Miki Ikeda
Machiko Kubota

Other

  • Winter Goodwill Games: 2000

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